McLean's book, out Sept. 11 |
Part of the reason is that fracked oil wells produce far less after the first year of operation. "According to an economist at the Kansas City Federal Reserve [Bank], production in the average well in the Bakken [Formation] — a key area for fracking shale in North Dakota — declines 69 percent in its first year and more than 85 percent in its first three years," McLean writes. "A conventional well might decline by 10 percent a year. For fracking operations to keep growing, they need huge investments each year to offset the decline from the previous years’ wells."
After horizontal fracking was perfected, it took off quickly, partly because of record-low interest rates after the Great Recession. It has survived because investors are still willing to buy in, buoying an industry bogged down by increasing debt, McLean writes. Hedge-fund manager Jim Chanos told McLean that "the industry has a very bad history of money going into it and never coming out."
In the first quarter of this year, only five of the top 20 fracking companies made more money than they spent, mostly because of wells in the oil-rich Permian Basin in West Texas and southeast New Mexico. Most companies' market value is based on profits, but fracking companies' value is based on the acreage they own — their potential profit. "It’s all a bit reminiscent of the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, when internet companies were valued on the number of eyeballs they attracted, not on the profits they were likely to make," McLean writes. "As long as investors were willing to believe that profits were coming, it all worked — until it didn’t."
McLean's new book, Saudi America: The Truth About Fracking and How It's Changing the World (Columbia Global Reports, $15.19) comes out Sept. 11.
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